with
John Fels, The Power of Maps, Guilford
Press, New York, 1992; Routledge, Abingdon, UK, 1993; Taylor
and Franics, London, 1998, 2000 (a History Book Club selection,
a Book of the Month Club selection, a Quality Paperback Bookclub
selection, a Lingua Franca “Breakthrough Book in
Geography,” reviewed in The Christian Science Monitor,
Cartographica, Isis, Cartography and Geographic
Information Systems, The Professional Geographer,
Mapline, Queen’s Quarterly, Journal
of Historical Geography, the American Center for Design’s
Statements, Science as Culture, et cetera).

with
Robert Beck, Home Rules, Johns Hopkins University Press,
Baltimore, 1994 (reviewed in Transactions of the Institute of
British Geographers, The New Yorker, Journal of
Marriage and the Family, Religious
Studies Review, Library Journal, Design Book Review,
The Providence Journal-Bulletin, et cetera).

with
John Krygier, Making Maps: A Visual Guide to Map Design for
GIS, Guilford,
New York, 2005 (reviewed in Journal of the American Planning
Association, International Research in Geographical and
Environmental Education, Cartouche, Journal of
Planning Literature, Cartography, Very Spatial,
The Map Room, Planning, et cetera).

Route 66, Center for American Places, Staunton, VA, 2005, is an innovative history of the great American highway. Written by Arthur Krim, Denis was deeply involved in readying the book for publication. His “Edited by” credit on the title page only hints at his involvement. The book won the J. B. Jackson Prize for 2006, awarded by the Association of American Geographers, for "conveying the insights of professional geography in language that is interesting and attractive to a lay audience.”

Shadowed
Spaces
(Arika, 2007) Small booklet printed for a tour of the U.K. with
Tamio Shiraishi, Ikuro Takahashi, Denis Wood, and Sean Meehan. Booklet
includes the first publication of Wood’s essay Shadowed Spaces:
In Defense of Indefensible Space and an introduction that Sean Meehan
wroteabout the tour. Letterpress cover and hand-stitched binding.
Published by Arika, UK.

Seeing
Through Maps: Second Edition has just been translated into Thai and brought out by the Kobfai Publishing Project of the Foundation
for Democracy and Development Studies in Bangkok.

Korean! Denis and John Krygier's cartography text, Making Maps, has just been published in Korean by Sigma Press. They did a beautiful job! Visit them atwww.sigmapress.co.kr.

SECOND EDITION of Everything Sings. An expanded and revised second edition of Everything Sings. It has ten new maps, two original essays, by Albert Mobilio and Ander Monson, and an interview with Denis by Blake Butler. Wrapped in a violet dust jacket, the book is bound in abrilliant yellow with grass green endpapers. It contains every bit of the first edition. Distributed by Artbook/D.A.P., it's for sale at siglio, Amazon, and elsewhere. Among the new maps are Dogs, Barking Dogs, Flowering Trees, Roof Lines, Stories, Families, Numbers, Footprints, and Nesting. The story of Boylan Heights grows more and more interesting!

Second, "The Commemorative Edition,” of Arthur Krim’s Route 66: Iconography of the American Highway, George F. Thompson Publishing, Staunton, VA. Denis was deeply involved in readying this innovative history of the great American highway for publication. His “Edited by” credit only hints at his involvement. The publication of this revised and updated edition – with additional photographs by Steve Fitch, Jim Farber and others – coincides with the Route 66 exhibition at the Autry National Center of the American West in Los Angeles.

Korean again! Denis’ atlas, Everything Sings, has just been published in Korean by Propaganda Press. They did a beautiful job! Visit their site for the book here. Scroll down through he Korean to see selected pages.

with Joe Bryan,Weaponizing Maps: Indigenous Peoples and Counterinsurgency in the Americas, Guilford, New York, 2015. Click here for Guilford. Click here for Amazon.

There’s lots new in the Making Maps: Third Edition, just released from Guilford Press. Denis and John have thoroughly revised a book that now bears only passing resemblance to the first edition of eleven years ago: revised chapter structure, new examples, much more color, an expanded comic strip, but in even fewer pages! This is not just another boring old cartography textbook. It’s a book about making maps!